Israeli government adopts measures increasing civil control of West Bank

LONDON and TEL AVIV -- The Israeli government adopted a series of significant, bureaucratically complex measures that would allow Israelis and Jews abroad to more easily purchase and build on land in the West Bank, consolidating Israeli control in the area that would potentially serve as the heartland for a future Palestinian state.

The measures, which were approved over the weekend, are likely to be challenged in the Israeli Supreme Court. But they represent the most far-reaching attempts by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's right-wing government to advance a de-facto annexation of the West Bank.

The Palestinian Authority, the governing body for Palestinians that already has only limited powers in the West Bank, described the moves as an "unprecedented escalation" and "illegal," views echoed by regional Arab states.

Mussa Qawasma/Reuters - PHOTO: A Palestinian man puts on a keffiyeh as an Israeli soldier stands guard in the old city in Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Feb. 9, 2026.

U.S. President Donald Trump has previously said the U.S. opposes attempts by Israel to annex the West Bank, a long-held dream of some settler groups and far-right ministers who now hold powerful positions in Netanyahu's government.

The newly adopted measures are expected to deepen Israeli civil -- as opposed to military -- control of new areas within the West Bank, including key religious sites in Hebron, and are designed to make it easier for Israelis to buy land in the territory.

Israel's Security Cabinet, headed by Netanyahu, approved on Sunday a series of new measures that would lift a ban on the sale of land to private Israeli Jews, transfer construction authority at religious and sensitive sites in the city of Hebron to the Israeli government, and declassify land registry records.

Hazem Bader/AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: Palestinian boys look out over the Israeli-occupied West Bank city of Hebron from a rooftop on Feb. 9, 2026.

The United Nations condemned the measures, with a spokesperson for the secretary-general saying ina statementthat "all Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and their associated regime and infrastructure, have no legal validity and are in flagrant violation of international law, including relevant United Nations resolutions."

The measures would allow the Israeli government to operate under the guise of civilian issues in Palestinian areas A and B for the first time, which contravenes the Oslo Accords. Under the Oslo Accords, the Palestinian Authority is the sole authority responsible for civilian matters in Area A and B. Israel, in contrast, has full Israeli civil and security control over Area C, which represents about 60% of the West Bank.

Bezalel Smotrich, Israel's far-right, pro-settlement finance minister, hailed the move as an "historic day for settlement for Judea and Samaria," as parts of the West Bank are known in Hebrew.

He said the changes would "fundamentally change the legal and civil reality." He boasted that it would end the prospects for a potential Palestinian State.

Netanyahu has vowed that a Palestinian state "will not be established," even as Western countries, including France, Canada and the United Kingdom, have moved to recognize a Palestinian state.

Hazem Bader/AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: A Palestinian woman stands in the yard of her home as shops and homes belonging to Palestinian families in Beit Aawa, west the Israeli-occupied West Bank city of Hebron on Feb. 5, 2026.

The office of the Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, issued a statement condemning the measures as "dangerous decisions" designed to "deepen attempts to annex the occupied West Bank."

The president's office said the move was a "blatant violation" of the Oslo Accords, which divided the West Bank into Areas A, B and C, adding that the move represents an "unprecedented escalation targeting the Palestinian presence and its national and historical rights throughout the Palestinian territory."

Abbas' office described the move as illegal and called for the U.S. and the European Union to intervene.

​A joint statement by the foreign ministers of eight Muslim countries condemned the new measures.

The foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Qatar, Indonesia, Egypt, Turkey, Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates said ina statementposted on social media that they collectively "condemned in the strongest terms the illegal Israeli decisions and measures aimed at imposing unlawful Israeli sovereignty, entrenching settlement activity, and enforcing a new legal and administrative reality in the occupied West Bank, thereby accelerating attempts at its illegal annexation and the displacement of the Palestinian people."

Hazem Bader/AFP via Getty Images - PHOTO: This picture shows an Israeli flag fluttering above the Israeli settlement of Beit Romano (unseen), with Palestinian buildings in the background, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank city of Hebron on Feb. 9, 2026.

"They reaffirmed that Israel has no sovereignty over the occupied Palestinian territories," the statement added.

According to Peace Now, an Israeli settlement watchdog and activist nongovernmental organization, the measures adopted over the weekend would effectively mean that Israeli authorities can now carry out legal demolitions of Palestinian property in Areas A and B, which comprise around 40% of the West Bank and which under the Oslo accords have been governed by the Palestinian Authority.

While the Israeli military could operate in those areas as the occupying power, the "government is now seeking to ignore its international commitments and begin administrative operations inside areas of the Palestinian Authority. Under the Oslo Accords, Israel has operated militarily in PA areas since the early 2000s," the watchdog said.

Israeli government adopts measures increasing civil control of West Bank

LONDON and TEL AVIV -- The Israeli government adopted a series of significant, bureaucratically complex measures that wou...
ICE is cracking down on people who follow them in their cars

(Removes 'downtown' from paragraph 2)

By Ted Hesson, Kristina Cooke and Brad Heath

WASHINGTON, Feb 10 (Reuters) - Becky Ringstrom was heading home after following federal immigration officers in her gray Kia SUV in suburban Minneapolis when she was suddenly boxed in by unmarked vehicles. At least a half-dozen masked agents jumped out to arrest her, one knocking on her windshield with a metal object as if threatening to use it to break her window.

After the arrest, captured on bystander video verified by Reuters, the 42-year-old mother of seven later said she was transported to Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis where an officer gave her a citation charging her under a ​federal law that criminalizes impeding law enforcement. The official said her name and photo would be added to a government database.

The arrest of Ringstrom became the latest detention of one of thousands of local activists for violating Title 18, Section 111 of the U.S. Code, a catch-all charge for anyone who "forcibly assaults, resists, opposes, impedes, intimidates, or interferes" ‌with a federal officer conducting official duties. The statute can be charged as a felony or misdemeanor. As a felony, it carries up to 20 years in prison, but penalties beyond eight years are reserved for people who use "a deadly or dangerous weapon" or cause an injury.

A Reuters review of federal court records found that the Trump administration has prosecuted at least 655 people under that charge across the U.S. since a series of city-focused immigration crackdowns began last summer. ‌That's more than double the prosecutions during the same period in 2024-2025, according to a review of publicly available criminal filings in Westlaw, a legal research database owned by Thomson Reuters.

Reuters usedartificial intelligencein some instances to classify the charges, with a spot-check showing 98% accuracy. The numbers are nationwide and Reuters was not able to determine how many were connected to immigration enforcement, how many were charged as felonies, or resulted in convictions.

The charges are part of a broader effort by the Trump administration to clamp down on ICE opponents, who they portray as rioters who pose threats to officers and undermine their efforts to arrest immigrants with criminal records.

"Assaulting and obstructing law enforcement is a felony," said U.S. Department of Homeland Security spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin. She said federal immigration officers "used the minimum amount of force necessary to protect themselves, the public, and federal property."

ICE has been tracking the names of protesters in an internal database for several months, according to two U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss operations.

The government database contains names, photos, actions that provoked suspicion, locations and license plates, the officials said, adding that the effort was intended to spot patterns that could lead to charges.

DHS said ⁠it does not maintain a database of U.S. "domestic terrorists," but does track threats. "We do of course monitor and investigate and refer all ‌threats, assaults and obstruction of our officers to the appropriate law enforcement," McLaughlin said.

One of the officials said ICE was referring several people per day in Minnesota alone to federal prosecutors for potential charges under the same law for interfering with police operations.

White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said the Trump administration was committed to protecting First Amendment freedoms, but that people impeding law enforcement "will be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law."

OBSERVING ICE

Ringstrom had watched federal immigration officers for about 45 minutes as they sat in a parked car in her neighborhood on Thursday, January 29. When they started to ‍move, she decided to follow along in her SUV, keeping a distance of multiple car lengths behind, she said.

At a roundabout, a Border Patrol agent approached her car and said, "Last time I'm going to warn you," according to video Ringstrom recorded on her phone.

The officers went right at a stop sign and she went left, she said. Several minutes later as she started to head back toward her house, multiple vehicles with federal officers stopped and arrested her, she said.

"I know what I'm doing is not wrong," Ringstrom said later in an interview with Reuters.

Still, she said she was terrified when federal officers approached her car. "There was a moment where I thought I could be Renee Good," she said, referring to one of the two U.S. citizen protesters fatally shot by federal immigration officers in Minneapolis in January.

After her arrest, she was issued a citation, reviewed by Reuters, ​which said the court date was "TBD" - to be determined.

McLaughlin said Ringstrom "stalked law enforcement and attempted to obstruct law enforcement from performing their sworn duties."

Seth Stoughton, a professor focused on policing at University of South Carolina School of Law, said the law in the past mostly has been used to charge assaults on officers and specifically states that the alleged crime must be committed "forcibly."

"Without ‌any physical contact, just following an agent in a car, it's not clear to me that that's resistance or impeding in the first place, and it certainly seems like a stretch to establish that as forcible," Stoughton said.

A federal judge in Minneapolis said in a mid-January order that a vehicle following ICE at "an appropriate distance" did not justify a traffic stop or arrest, but that order was paused by an appeals court 10 days later.

The judge's now-paused order did not say what exact distance would be deemed safe.

Deborah Fleischaker, a top ICE official under former President Joe Biden, said it was "inappropriate and unconstitutional" to intimidate and arrest people peacefully following immigration officers in their cars.

"Observing ICE activities is not a crime and should not be treated as such," she said.

McLaughlin said U.S. Border Patrol agents at the scene gave Ringstrom "lawful commands and warnings" but that she continued to obstruct operations, leading to her arrest.

"When agitators willingly involve themselves and inject themselves in law enforcement operations, they are risking arrest as well as jeopardizing the safety of themselves and those around them," McLaughlin said.

VIDEOS SHOW ICE OFFICERS DRAWING WEAPONS

While new internal ICE guidance, reported by Reuters in late January, instructed officers not to engage with protesters, the encounters have not stopped.

Two videos in recent weeks verified by Reuters showed ICE officers drawing their weapons as they approached vehicles that allegedly had been following them.

South of Minneapolis on January 29, the same day Ringstrom was arrested, federal immigration officers abruptly swerved, stopped their vehicle and approached a woman driving behind them with guns drawn, according to dashcam footage ⁠from her vehicle first reported by Minnesota Public Radio and verified by Reuters.

McLaughlin said ICE officers were attempting to arrest a criminal offender when the woman began "stalking and obstructing" them, leading the officers to try to arrest ​her.

"Law enforcement officers attempted to pull her over using their emergency lights to issue her a warning," McLaughlin said. "Ignoring law enforcement commands, the agitator refused to pull over and began driving recklessly including running stop signs, nearly colliding with ​multiple vehicles, and driving directly at law enforcement in an attempt to ram their vehicle."

Reuters was not able to independently verify whether the woman ignored commands or drove recklessly.

In a separate incident on February 3, two ICE officers approached a car that had been following them, again, with guns drawn, according to video verified by Reuters and a DHS statement.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security said the vehicle had been "stalking" and "obstructing" ICE officers.

"The agitators then followed the officers as they departed and made hand motions suggestive of possessing a firearm," DHS said.

Reuters could not independently verify the agency's account. The video reviewed by Reuters showed the ‍vehicles once they had stopped.

Under Trump, numerous DHS statements after violent encounters with immigration agents have been inaccurate ⁠or incomplete.

ICE AT YOUR FRONT DOOR

Some Minnesota residents say they believe they are becoming the subject of an intimidation campaign.

In a suburb north of St. Paul on January 22, an ICE officer led a woman who was following his vehicle back to her house, making it clear that he knew her identity and address, Reuters-verified video filmed by the husband showed.

The woman's husband spoke to the ICE officer outside of the couple's house. When the husband questioned the tactic, the officer said, "You raise your voice, I erase your voice," the video showed.

One ICE officer told Reuters they have led people following them back to their houses after running their license plates "to freak them out."

McLaughlin said ICE would review body camera ⁠footage and investigate the incident in St. Paul, but did not comment on ICE using the tactic to frighten opponents.

Earlier in January, two friends - Brandon Siguenza and Patty O'Keefe - who were following an ICE vehicle in Minneapolis said officers fired pepper spray into their car, smashed their car window and detained them for eight hours.

McLaughlin said officers gave them multiple warnings "to stop impeding" operations, but that they "chose to continue to stalk law enforcement and were arrested."

"The passenger refused to roll ‌down the window and exit the vehicle," McLaughlin said. "ICE law enforcement followed their training and used the minimum amount of force necessary to make the arrest."

McLaughlin did not explicitly confirm that officers broke the car window or deployed pepper spray.

Siguenza and O'Keefe have not been charged.

(Reporting by Ted Hesson and Brad Heath in Washington, ‌and Kristina Cooke in San Francisco. Additional reporting by Maria Tsvetkova, Monica Naime, Vinaya K, Marine Delrue, Tiffany Le, Fernando Robles and Gerardo Gomez. Editing by Craig Timberg, Diane Craft and Michael Learmonth)

ICE is cracking down on people who follow them in their cars

(Removes 'downtown' from paragraph 2) By Ted Hesson, Kristina Cooke and Brad Heath WASHINGTON, Feb 10 (...
Russian border region faces 'rolling blackouts' amid Ukraine attacks, governor says

Governors of two Russian regions bordering Ukraine said Tuesday that residents are facing sustained power outages as a result of Ukrainian attacks on energy infrastructure, as both sides continue long-range strikes in the run-up to the fourth anniversary of Moscow's full-scale invasion of its neighbor.

Good Morning America

Vyacheslav Gladkov, the governor of Russia's western Belgorod region said in posts to Telegram that power and heating outages had forced hundreds of people to rely on "heating points."

"Unfortunately, rolling blackouts are inevitable," Gladkov said, noting that Belgorod city will be among the areas subject to unpredictable outages.

Gov. Alexander Khinshtein of the neighboring Kursk region said that 28,000 customers were without power as a result of "another series of cowardly attacks on our territory."

Both regions have been subject to regular Ukrainian drone, missile and artillery attacks. Both have also seen Ukrainian ground incursions during the nearly 4-year-old war.

Stringer/Reuters - PHOTO: A residential building in Belgorod, Russia, is pictured during a power blackout on Feb. 3, 2026.

'Normal life has disappeared': Russia's energy offensive plunges Ukraine into dark and bitter cold

Recent months have seen both Russia and Ukraine focus attacks on energy infrastructure targets. In Ukraine, millions have facedrolling outagesas a result of months of Russian missile and drone strikes on energy targets all across the country. Moscow, Kyiv has said, is trying to freeze Ukrainians into submission.

The Kremlin, meanwhile, has framed long-range Ukrainian strikes as "terrorist attacks."

Zelenskyy on Sunday defended Ukraine's retaliatory attacks inside Russia, describing the Russian energy sector as "a legitimate target."

"We do not have to choose whether we strike a military target or energy," Zelenskyy said while addressing students at the National Aviation University in Kyiv. "He sells this energy. He sells oil. So is it energy, or is it a military target? Honestly, it's the same thing. He sells oil, takes the money, invests it in weapons. And with those weapons, he kills Ukrainians."

Zelenskyy said that left Ukraine with two options: "We either build weapons and strike their weapons. Or we strike the source where their money is generated and multiplied. And that source is their energy sector. That is what is happening. All of this is a legitimate target for us."

Handout/Ukrainian State Emergency Servic - PHOTO: This handout photograph taken and released by the State Emergency Service of Ukraine on Feb. 9, 2026 shows firefighters extinguishing a fire in a damaged private house following an air attack in the Kharkiv region of Ukraine.

Russian strikes kill 3 in Ukraine as Zelenskyy calls for Western air defense aid

The nightly exchange of drones continued on Monday night.

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Ukraine's air force said Russia launched 125 drones into the country overnight, of which 110 were shot down or suppressed. Thirteen drones impacted across six locations, the air force said in a post to Telegram.

Vadym Filashkin, the governor of Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, said in a post to social media that two people were killed and seven people injured by a Russian strike in the city of Slovyansk, close to the front line.

At least four people were injured by a drone strike on a house in the southern city of Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine's Interior Ministry said. Among the injured was a 1-year-old child, the ministry said.

Oleh Kiper, the governor of the southern Odesa region, said in a post to Telegram that Russian drones attacked energy infrastructure overnight, leaving at least three communities partially without power.

The Russian Defense Ministry, meanwhile, said its forces shot down at least six Ukrainian drones overnight into Tuesday morning.

The Associated Press - Russia Ukraine War Blackout

Ukraine war must become 'untenable' for Russia, Zelenskyy says after latest strikes

Russia's federal air transport agency, Rosaviatsiya, said that temporary flight restrictions were introduced at airports in the Black Sea city of Gelendzhik and in the western city of Kaluga.

Peace maneuvers are ongoing against the backdrop of long-range strikes and Russia's attritional offensive operations in eastern Ukraine.

Zelenskyy said in a post to social media on Monday night that proposed post-war Western security guarantees intended to protect Ukraine from repeated Russian aggression are "ready."

"There is no alternative to security. There is no alternative to peace. There is no alternative to rebuilding our country," Zelenskyy said.

The Ukrainian president also said there will be "significant international events this week -- on defense and security."

AP - PHOTO: In this image made from video provided by Russian Defense Ministry Press Service on Feb. 4, 2026, Russian rocket artillery fires toward Ukrainian positions at an undisclosed location in Ukraine.

Russia launches more than 440 drones, missiles at Ukraine overnight, Zelenskyy says

"Our negotiating team is working every single day on the documents and proposals that could deliver results at the upcoming meetings," Zelenskyy said.

"Most importantly, our partners must be aligned the same way we are in Ukraine: peace is needed, and reliable security guarantees are the only real foundation for peace and for preventing the Russians from breaking agreements through strikes or hybrid operation of some kind," he added.

Russian border region faces 'rolling blackouts' amid Ukraine attacks, governor says

Governors of two Russian regions bordering Ukraine said Tuesday that residents are facing sustained power outages as a...
David Njoku announces time with Browns is over after nine seasons: 'Beautiful journey'

David Njoku is taking his talents elsewhere.

NY Post Sports An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Cleveland Browns tight end David Njoku (85) warming up, Image 2 shows Browns tight end David Njoku (85) catching a touchdown pass over Titans cornerback Darrell Baker Jr. (39)

The longtime Browns tight end is not returning to Cleveland after spending the first nine years of his career with the organization, he revealed in an Instagram post Monday night.

"Cleveland, first off I love you. These 9 years have been a beautiful journey,"he wrote in the post."I'm am so grateful for all the memories we shared together. Thank you to The Haslams, Andrew Berry and the whole browns organization for everything!! All my teammates I shared the battle with I'm so grateful for you guys. The time for me to find a new home has come and all I can think of is just the gratefulness in my heart. The city of Cleveland will forever be home."

Browns tight end David Njoku (85) warms up before the game against the San Francisco 49ers at Huntington Bank Field. Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

He ended the message with a heart emoji and the hashtag, "ChiefOut.

Njoku was taken with the No. 29 overall pick by the Browns in 2017 and has gone on to make significant contributions to the franchise since his arrival.

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He will depart Cleveland ranked second among tight ends in franchise history in touchdown catches with 34 and receptions with 384.

Rumors had started to swirl about Njoku before the NFL trade deadline in November, but he did not end up getting moved.

Browns tight end David Njoku (85) catches a touchdown pass as Tennessee Titans cornerback Darrell Baker Jr. (39) defends in the first half of an NFL football game in Cleveland, Sunday, Dec. 7, 2025. AP

The Browns are expected to look very different next season withnew head coach Todd Monkenat the helm, which is something general manager Andrew Berry implied, saying the offense will see "significant turnover."

Njoku dealt with injury issues during his final two seasons in Cleveland, missing a combined 11 games over that time.

He finished last season with only 33 catches for 293 yards and four touchdowns, which were the fewest catches and receiving yards he's had since the 2020 season.

In his nine years with the Browns, Njoku earned Pro Bowl honors in 2023.

David Njoku announces time with Browns is over after nine seasons: ‘Beautiful journey’

David Njoku is taking his talents elsewhere. The longtime Browns tight end is not returning to Cleveland after...
Last sexual misconduct lawsuits against NFL QB Deshaun Watson dismissed

The final two of nearly 30 civil lawsuits that Cleveland Browns quarterbackDeshaun Watsonhad faced from women accusing him of sexual misconduct have been dismissed, according to court records.

The dismissal of these two lawsuits clears Watson of legal problems he had been facing since 2021 after 27 women came forward and accused him in court filings in Texas of exposing himself, touching them with his genitals or kissing them against their will, mostly during massage appointments.

Some of the women alleged Watson, 30, forced them to perform oral sex and one woman accused him of sexually assaulting her.

In one of the lastcasesfiled, a woman brought a civil lawsuit against Watson in September 2024, which alleged that he forced himself on her four years earlier while he was playing for Houston. That lawsuit, which was filed in Texas, sued Watson for $1 million in damages.

The two dismissals this week come as both of those lawsuits had been set to go to trial in the next few weeks. The accusations against Watson were made when he played for the Houston Texans.

It is believed that Watson has no other lawsuits pending in connection with the sexual misconduct allegations.

Cleveland Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson looks on during a preseason NFL football game against the Carolina Panthers, Aug. 8, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. / Credit: Jacob Kupferman / AP

One of the lawsuits that was dismissed on Friday has been settled, said Tony Buzbee, the attorney for the woman who had filed it. Buzbee declined to comment further, citing confidentiality of the settlement agreement. Buzbee's client alleged Watson touched her with his penis multiple times during a massage session.

It was not immediately known if the other dismissed lawsuit had also been settled. Anissah Nguyen, an attorney for the woman who filed the lawsuit, didn't immediately respond to an email or call seeking comment. Nguyen's client had accused Watson of pressuring her to perform oral sex during a massage.

Watson's attorneys declined to comment.

Watson, who was traded to the Browns in March 2022, has long denied any wrongdoing, and two separate Texas grand juries declined to indict him. One of his attorneys, Rusty Hardin, had previously said the allegations against Watson were "meritless."

"I don't remember or recall any sexual encounters with her," Watson said in a 2023 deposition he gave while being questioned about the woman represented by Nguyen.

The woman represented by Nguyen had also sued the Houston Texans, alleging Watson had assaulted women with the help and resources of the team. The lawsuit against the Texans was also dismissed last week.

A spokesperson for the Texans didn't immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

In July 2022, 30 women who had accused the Texans of turning a blind eye to allegations against their former star quarterback settled their legal claims against the team.

It was not unusual that all the cases against Watson were settled, said David Ring, a California-based attorney who is not connected to the lawsuits and who has represented victims of sexual assault. He said the majority of civil lawsuits are typically resolved before going to trial and that high-profile defendants typically don't want cases to play out in a public courtroom.

"He's trying to put all of this behind him," Ring said.

Watson's legal problems began after dozens of women claimed to have been the victims of sexual misconduct or assault between 2017 and 2020.

Most of the lawsuits against Watson were settled in 2022.

Following the allegations,Watson was suspendedfor the first 11 games in 2022 forviolating the league's personal conduct policy.

Watson was also fined $5 million and underwent a mandatory evaluation before being reinstated by the league. He has played in only 19 games for the Browns due to the NFL suspension and injuries.

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Last sexual misconduct lawsuits against NFL QB Deshaun Watson dismissed

The final two of nearly 30 civil lawsuits that Cleveland Browns quarterbackDeshaun Watsonhad faced from women accusing...
Absolute Chaos Erupts During Pistons-Hornets Game After Punches Thrown; Four Players Ejected

This is the kind of chaos that has you glued to the screen … insanity!

The Daily Caller

In the third quarter of theDetroit Pistons-Charlotte Hornets game Monday night, a brawl ended up breaking out and the scene is pure bananas. A total offour players were ejectedas a result of the fight.

ForwardMoussa Diabateand forwardMiles Bridgeswere ejected on the Hornets' side, while the Pistons saw centerJalen Durenand forwardIsaiah Stewarttossed. Charles Lee, the head coach of Charlotte, was later ejected during fourth quarter action after being restrained from charging toward a referee regarding a call.

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With a little more than seven minutes remaining in the third quarter, Duren was fouled by Diabate while driving into the paint. After the former turned around, the two then got face-to-face, seemingly butting heads in the process. Eventually, Duren pushed Diabate's head, and from there, all hell broke loose. It was so crazy that the police even had to get involved.(RELATED: Olympic Athletes Are Being Warned Not To Celebrate With Their Medals Too Much Because They're Breaking)

While Diabate was being held back byDetroitforwardTobias Harris, Diabate tried to punch Duren, who walked away from the scene. However, Bridges ran after him and tossed a punch, with Duren retaliating with his own. Diabate tried to charge once again at Duren, but was held back.

To make the scene even wackier, Stewart got involved by exiting the bench for a confrontation with Bridges, with the latter throwing a punch at his opponent. From there, the two wrestled. In one portion of the chaos, Stewart had Bridges headlocked and punched him over and over again on the head.

It was chaos, absolutely beautiful chaos.

If theNBAcould be like this every night, sign me up for season tickets!

Absolute Chaos Erupts During Pistons-Hornets Game After Punches Thrown; Four Players Ejected

This is the kind of chaos that has you glued to the screen … insanity! In the third quarter of theDetroit Pisto...
Bill Maher Makes Shocking Confession About Jimmy Kimmel Amid Feud

Real TimehostBill Maheris feeling regretful about thebreakdown of his relationshipwithJimmy Kimmel, admitting that he worries the two "may never talk again."

TV Insider Bill Maher and Jimmy Kimmel

The late-night host made the confession to guestAdam Carollaon the latest episode of theClub Randompodcast, saying, "Jimmy Kimmel, he's very mad at me. And I know you're close to him. I hope you tell him that, you know, I'm sorry that he got bent out of shape."

Back in November, Maher mocked Kimmel's wife,Molly McNearney, on an episode ofReal Timeafter she said she emailed several relatives a "list of 10 reasons not to vote" forDonald Trumpand cut off family members who did not comply.

"Ultimatums don't make people rethink their politics. They make them rethink you," Maher said at the time. "Write a top 10 list to yourself where you try to imagine ten reasons why 77 million Americans didn't want to trust you with taking power… As I like to remind my very pure friends, we voted for the same person. You're just why [Kamala Harris] lost."

Maher later admitted that Kimmel hadn't spoken to him since he made the comments.

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"I don't think I did anything wrong. We can have disagreements," he told Carolla, per theNew York Post. "This is the difference between the right and the left. It bugs me so much. My tribe is supposed to be the left, but these are the people who just can't talk to you unless you're exactly there."

Maher called Kimmel "one of the nicest guys" and said he "exchanged emails" with him in the past. "I did a mea culpa when we exchanged emails… just saying, like, sometimes I am a little brash about me when they compare me with the other late-night guys, and I'm like, I'm not like you guys," he said. "I'm not. You could all exchange your monologues, all of you, and no one would know the difference in tone."

"And like, if that's not good enough for you, then I think you're the a**h***," Maher continued. "And I don't think Jimmy is an a**h***. I think he's a great guy, and it bugs me that, you know, because of what the latest thing was, that we may never talk again."

Maher previously addressed his falling out with Kimmelduring an interviewwith The Young Turks host Ana Kasparian in December. "I was as kid-gloved as I could," he stated, referring to what he said about McNearney. "And I see they're mad at me. Uh, I'm sorry. I mean, I was being, again, as respectful as I could, but I don't agree with that point of view."

He added, "I love Jimmy. I always have. I don't know him that well, but he's a great guy. I hope we're friends forever, but I don't know. You know, the liberals and the woke, that's a schism. It just is."

Read the latest entertainment news onTV Insider.

Bill Maher Makes Shocking Confession About Jimmy Kimmel Amid Feud

Real TimehostBill Maheris feeling regretful about thebreakdown of his relationshipwithJimmy Kimmel, admitting that he wor...

 

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